Contact-line singularities resolved exclusively by the Kelvin effect: volatile liquids in air
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Publication:4559320
DOI10.1017/JFM.2018.760zbMATH Open1415.76210OpenAlexW2901865797MaRDI QIDQ4559320FDOQ4559320
Authors: P. Colinet, A. Y. Rednikov
Publication date: 3 December 2018
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2018.760
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- Boundary conditions at the vapor-liquid interface
- Gas-liquid phase transition and singularities
- The contact line of an evaporating droplet over a solid wedge and the pinned-unpinned transition
- An approximate solution of the hydrodynamic problem associated with receding liquid-gas contact lines
Cites Work
- The third-order differential equation arising in thin-film flows and relevant to Tanner's law
- The dynamics of the spreading of liquids on a solid surface. Part 1. Viscous flow
- Moving contact lines: scales, regimes, and dynamical transitions
- THE SPREADING OF A THIN DROP BY GRAVITY AND CAPILLARITY
- Characteristic lengths at moving contact lines for a perfectly wetting fluid: the influence of speed on the dynamic contact angle
- Nonlinear stability of evaporating/condensing liquid films
- Spreading of thin volatile liquid droplets on uniformly heated surfaces
- Rival contact-angle models and the spreading of drops
- The strong influence of substrate conductivity on droplet evaporation
- On contact angles in evaporating liquids
- Contact angles for evaporating liquids predicted and compared with existing experiments
- On thin evaporating drops: When is the \(d^{2}\)-law valid?
- Nonlocal description of evaporating drops
- Elastic-plated gravity currents
- Asymptotic analysis of the evaporation dynamics of partially wetting droplets
- Spreading dynamics and contact angle of completely wetting volatile drops
Cited In (6)
- Thin-film equations with singular potentials: an alternative solution to the contact-line paradox
- Does Maxwell's hypothesis of air saturation near the surface of evaporating liquid hold at all spatial scales?
- Some mathematical aspects of the Kelvin equation
- Kinetic effects regularize the mass-flux singularity at the contact line of a thin evaporating drop
- Water-propylene glycol sessile droplet shapes and migration: Marangoni mixing and separation of scales
- The multicomponent diffuse-interface model and its application to water/air interfaces
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